Great List of CSAs from Amagansett Farm Institute and our Readers

In 2003, a friend of mine was munching on a weird looking vegetable. “What’s that,” I asked. I don’t remember what she was eating, but I remember she said she got it from a CSA. “What’s that, I repeated.

The next week I signed up for my first community supported agriculture program at Golden Earthworm Organic Farm in Jamesport. I gave one of our cutest farmers, Matt Kurek, a lump of cash and each week I stopped by the farm to a surprise box of vegetables, sometimes some fruit and some flowers, and went home with more leafy greens than I’d ever had in my house at once.

I bought another salad spinner. The method was to wash all the greens right away; I was much more likely to use them, and they kept for at least a week in the two spinners that were now taking up quite a bit of shelf space. The greens were so fresh, their cell walls so stiff with cellulose, they took longer to cook than the bagged spinach I’d given up buying.

Matt got his money up front to buy seeds and fertilizer and pay for help, and I got a long season of great produce from an organic farm.

A photo posted by ⠀⠀Balsam Farms, LLC. (@balsamfarms) on May 29, 2015 at 9:26am PDT

I’ve found most CSAs are packaged for a family of four. One year another couple and I split a share by picking up every other week. That worked better than splitting a box in half; a half bunch of carrots is a bummer.

Thanks to the people at Amagansett Food Institute and our great friends on Facebook, we have a list of vegetable and livestock farms that offer CSAs. The foodshed of the East End will not continue to grow and attract new talent if these farms cannot remain solvent. Here’s your chance to invest.

Eileen M. Duffy DWS holds a diploma in wines and spirits from the Wine & Spirit Education Trust. Her book on Long Island wine Behind the Bottle came out in 2015. Visit her website,eileenmduffy.com, to find out what else she’s working on.

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